Exactly; the OP image is saying that there's no point to doing that.
BatmanAoD
Both GitHub Actions and GitLab CI let you specify filepath rules for triggering jobs.
Definitely not gonna defend Microsoft's naming, let alone their versioning!
I used it briefly when it first came out; otherwise no, my employers have used Slack.
Apparently the JS name was selected and announced in partnership with Sun from the very beginning, and Sun had the copyright over both Java and JapaScript up until the acquisition by Oracle. I had no idea, but that makes perfect sense.
Bugs around read-notifications are pretty bad. Slack still has those, but they're infrequent and transient, and often solvable with a hard-refresh.
I've never understood the hatred for Teams. I don't particularly like Slack, and Teams (from my limited experience using it) doesn't seem that much worse.
Oracle? Oracle owns Java, not JavaScript.
Edit: mea culpa! Sun owned both!
I'm not even saying that Google's data collection is innocuous. I'm just saying that this post is incorrect in its claim that Google is letting Gemini access your apps even if you try to turn that access off. Just because Google does some nefarious things doesn't mean you can't think critically about actual specific actions they take.
Oh, that makes much more sense; thanks.
But if something like this existed, consumer vendors such as Dell might pre-install it.